The M. E. Luckenbach

200 F. 630, 1912 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1124
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedOctober 22, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 200 F. 630 (The M. E. Luckenbach) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The M. E. Luckenbach, 200 F. 630, 1912 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1124 (E.D.N.Y. 1912).

Opinion

VEEDER, District Judge.

This action arises out of a collision between the barge A. G. Ropes, in tow of the steam tug M. E. Lucken-bach, and the schooner Hugh Kelly, at or near the junction of Main Ship and Swash Channels, shortly after noon on April 22, 1909.

The tug Luckenbach was outward bound in the Main Ship Channel, with the loaded coal barges A. G. Ropes, William II. Conner, and Henry Endicott in tow, in the order named, on hawsers 75 fathoms or more in length. The three-masted schooner Hugh Kelly, outward bound, without cargo, was proceeding down the Swash Channel. The tug and schooner were, in plain sight of each other from a distance of more than a mile and a half apart; but each held its course until they were close together. When the tug had crossed the-schooner’s course, the latter attempted to avoid collision by swinging off in the line of the course of the tug and tow. The maneuver was unsuc[632]*632cessful. The' starboard bow and side of the schooner collided with the port quarter of the first barge, the Ropes, and the schooner’s stern swung around toward the hawser, between the Ropes and the second barge, the Conner. Thereupon the master of the Ropes, in order to free his own vessel and to prevent the schooner from sliding down on the hawser into the Conner, cast off the hawser between the Ropes and the Conner. The schooner then passed on between the Ropes and the Conner, and proceeded to sea by way of South Channel. The tug continued on her course through Gedney Channel with the first barge, the Ropes, and anchored her near the mouth of that channel.

When the master of the tug saw that the hawser connecting the first and second barges had been cast off, he signaled the Conner to anchor. The master of the Conner had already discovered that the hawser was in the water, although he says he had not seen it cast off, and was preparing to anchor when the tug signaled. He finally dropped one of his two anchors; but the Conner nevertheless brought up several minutes later on a shoal southeast of the black buoy CB1 at the turn into Gedney Channel. The third' barge, the Endicott, did not anchor, and was still fast to the Conner when the latter went aground. The tug returned at once after anchoring the Ropes, and attempted, without success, to release the stranded barge. Wrecking pumps from the tug were put aboard the Conner; but she filled so rapidly that the pumps were soon disabled. Thereafter, at the rise of the tide on the same day, the tug made another attempt to get the Conner afloat, but could only swing her bow around to the eastward. The barge and her cargo became a total loss, and later on the wreck was removed by the federal authorities. The point at which the wreck was located by the United States engineers, from triangulations tallen on April 27th and June 2d, is about 1,000 feet southeast of the point at which the libelants claim that the Conner stranded on April 22d.

The master of the barge, in his own behalf, and in behalf of her owners and the owner of her cargo, libeled the tug Euckenbach for the damages arising from the loss of barge, cargo, and personal effects. The Luckenbach brought the schooner Hugh Kelly in as a party respondent, by petition, under the fiñy-ninth admiralty rule. Subsequently the owner of the cargo petitioned to be joined as co-libelant.

The surrounding conditions on the day in question were these: The tide was the strength of the ebb, from one-third to one-half ebb. Its actual strength was estimated by witnesses, who were navigating with reference to it in this locality, as low as 2 and as high as 4 miles an hour. An expert pilot, whose qualifications are unquestioned, testified that its normal strength is 2.1 miles, and that it does not exceed 3.1 miles under abnormal conditions. The set of the tide in this locality when it becomes steady is E. S. E. The wind was from the west, about N. W. It was blowing at the rate of at least 10, but not more than IS, miles an hour. There was a ground swell from the southward.

The schooner was over 200 feet in length, and drew about 9Y¡¡, feet. [633]*633She was proceeding down the Swash Channel substantially on the channel course of S. R. % S. Her lower sails were set. The booms were on the port side. Her speed over the bottom is variously estimated; but it is safe to say that at no time after she sighted the tug did she make more than 4% miles an hour, and the indications are that she was making less as she approached the junction of the Main Ship Channel.

The general course of the Main Ship Channel is E. by N. % N. The indications are that the tug was heading up somewhat on this course to keep her long tow in the channel. With the prevailing tide and wind the barges would necessarily sag to the southward. The tow was a heavy one, all three barges carrying a full cargo of coal. The first barge, the Ropes, was 257 feet long, 44 feet beam, and drew 2&/± feet. The second barge, the Conner, was 210 feet long, 42 feet beam, and drew 24 or 25 feet. The third barge, the Endicott, was less than 200 feet long, 35 feet beam, and drew 16 feet. The Conner’s cargo was 2,147 tons. The estimates of the speed of the tug and tow vary. The indications are that her speed was at least equal to, and probably somewhat in excess of, that of .the schooner.

The captain of the tug testified that, when the tug and the first barge had crossed the line of the schooner’s course, he blew several blasts of liis whistle as a signal to the schooner that he intended to keep his course. The schooner, which was then about a quarter of a mile off, thereupon put her wheel to starboard, dropped the peak of her spanker, so that she would answer her helm, and swung off on a course parallel with that of the tug and tow until she got the wind on the end of her boom. In this situation the captain of the schooner practically lost control of his vessel, and the tide carried her into collision with the barge Ropes. When it appeared to the captain of the tug that the schooner’s jib boom would go into the mizzen rigging of the barge, he reduced his speed for a few moments, so that the barge would lose way. When the barge sagged off, he increased the tug’s speed again, in order to pull the barge clear. It was at or just before this juncture that the master of the Ropes cast off the hawser connecting the first and second barges.

The captain of the schooner testified that he navigated with reference to the expectation that the tug would cross under the schooner’s stern. It was not until the tug crossed his course that he had any reason to expect anything else, and then he swung off as described by the captain of theriug. He denies that the tug signaled him at any time before the collision. When the tug crossed his course, he was 400 feet off. His jib boom struck the mizzen rigging of the after mast of the barge, and, since the tug was going ahead at the time, she swung the schooner around, so that her sails swung to starboard.

[ 1 ] So far as the collision is concerned, the fault of the tug Ruck-enbach is clear. It was her duty to keep out of the way of the schooner; and her contention that she was unable, when danger became imminent, to do anything to avoid collision would not, if true, relieve her from responsibility. If, under the existing conditions, the master of the tug could not tow the three barges in such a way as to enable [634]*634him to comply with his obligation to keep out of the way of sailing vessels (and such is substantially -his testimony), he should not have attempted to take them out.

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Bluebook (online)
200 F. 630, 1912 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-m-e-luckenbach-nyed-1912.